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Southern Cal ifornîa
SUMMER TROJAN
VOL. VIII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1958
NO. 5
On<
nov
tod
rom outside influences, nature threatened us, but we have conquered nature; ’s problems are psycholog-
al.’
e ar
fn
:ui on a He
a J ready
living in the
he said. "Life depends explorations in psychology, ies of predictions.” jsaid. “at first, when man
ment
is
but one of psychology, haviorism. After that came so-\ve are a;l concerned j ciaj suggestion. None of us are
University faculties cannot altogether disclaim responsibility for what is taught below the university level in their own fields.
This was one of the main points brought out by Sumner Ives, in a speech to a Founders Hall audience yesterday.
Ives, a visiting instructor from Tulane University, thinks that when a student is taught a falsehood in his pre-University schooling. university faculties are “morally obligated to correct
them.*”
Teaching Truth
“The primary consideration is whether what we have been
teaching is—to the best of our knowledge—true, he said.
Everyone seems to believe
that linguistics is a new field. This notion, according to Ives, is true only in part. The term is new and is used to identify a
Official
Notice
All students who plan to enroll for Field Work in
School Administration and Supervision, (Ed. Ad. 529) or for Field Work in Secondary Administration and Supervision (Ed. Ad. 559) must attend a special meeting to be held Tuesday, July 15, at 1:15 p.m. in Administration 206.
It is important for all students who plan to register for Field Work during the coming school year, but who will not he able to attend instructional meetings this fall, to attend this meeting.
Edward H. LaFranehi, Chairman
recently isolated branch of the total study of language.
“But the basis which the linguist uses for discovering the grammatical machinery of English is very similar to the basis used by the Greek grammarians for discovering grammatical machinery of Greek more than two thousand years ago.”
Discusses Hooks
Dr. Ives went on to tell of the various books published on the subject which are the basis for modern language standards.
He then discussed
the back-grammar, Addison, feels that
ground of traditional noting figures like Swift and Pope. He the relic of this 18th century reaction survives in our schools today.
He feels that the reasons have been the “preservation of a respect for classical learning which, for so long a time, made a knowledge of Latin the mark of an educated man, and the failure of the language people themselves to apply themselves to useful and productive tasks.”
The total study of language is divided into several branches, structural linguistics, dialectology, semantics, and rhetoric, he said.
Defines Linguistics
Structural linguistics deals with the forms of language, with the tangible symbols tha convy meaning and the rules which describe their combination into actual utterances.
Dialectology deals with variations in language—with the social and regional differences within a particular language and with what the individual variations indicate as to the social status and regional backgrounds of those who use them.
(Continued on Page 3)
Mankind on Death s Brink States Heard
Civilization is operating on a brink which fluctuates back and forth. One more change, one more duel to the death and nothing will be left.
Such was the opinion rendered by Gerald Heard, philosopher, author and lecturer, when he spoke at SC Tuesday. i
“We must discover what we’re leads to the power of religion, going'to do in the future,” said This, in turn, leads to the law Heard. “Were no longer suffer-; of morality, which can be ful-1 ins
I BORDER-BOUND BY BUS
Trojans Plan Early Rising For Day in Tijuana Sun
filled by the law of love. This ' law of love can give you peace with yourself, your neighbor and | finally with the universe.”
Man’s Exploration
Heard, briefly outlining man’s
3 the importance realized he was an individual, he
f forecasting in regards to wea- thought he carried his own des- !
her and airplanes to illustrate j tiny. After that came the views
of Machiaveli which many people j followed. ‘You must behave to j all your friends as if they may be your enemies, and all your j enemies as if they may be your • friends,’ was one of his mottos,” Heard said.
Social Suggestion “The next step in man’s exploration.” said Heard, “was be-
point.
Dark Psyche
“We are no longer a thing of being,” he said, “we are now a thing of becoming. It is very important that we keep an open mind within the arms of an open heart.”
Heard feels that the first question of today is no longer one of t heologx “Today
with psychologyhe continued, | reasonable, we are just waiting “hut the psyche is still a vast,1 to be suggested, dark grand canyon. j “We only see things that con- j
Law of Love j firm our hearts,” he sa d “for j
“However, the moment of we can’t afford to break our darkness is opening up.” he said. J hearts. Psychological research “Man is just beginning his evo- i will continue, whether or not lution. The future of psychology! we are getting results remains is enormously helpful, for it to be seen.” *
Universities Responsible For Poor Schools-lves
BORDER BOUND—Hat dancing is one of the many sporis to be enjoyed by the busload of SC students who will leave tomorrow for Tijuana, Mexico.
Tomorrow morning at sic a bus load of Trojans and Tro-janes will head south of the border for a day in old Mexico.
The travelers will make their first stop at San Juan Capistrano for breakfast and a tour through the mission. The crumbling ruins of the old religious edifice make excellent settings for picture-taking. Visitors can even count the “returning swallows.” . *
The group will then proceed to Old San Diego where they will view Ramona’s marriage place, and the old San Diego Mission. Ramona was the heroine of the Helen Hunt Jackson novel. “Ramona.” She was an acKial person who lived in. the early days of California.
Lunch will be eaten at the San Diego Zoo. The zoo is supposedly the best zoo west of the Mississippi River.
The next stop will be Tijuana where the group will break up into small packs or go their separate ways for an afternoon of [ sightseeing.
The travelers will return by way of the Naval Repair Base ! and Training Center, Sunset ! Cliffs and La Jolla. This is an 1 excellent opportunity for out-of-state students and faculty to see ! some of the scenic wonders of i California and Mexico.
Student Gets Ph D From Local Dump
Bill McGrath, 38 , h i g h school teacher ami former Navy commander, got his Ph. D in a dump. Few people can make that statement.
He was preparing to move from a rooming house at l(Hi2 W. 35th St., and put all his valuable papers — including Navy Discharge and Reserve certificates, his Ph.D., and deeds and Escrow papers to five parcels of proprety valued in excess of $250,000 — in a cardboard box.
His landlady threw the en-. tire collection into the trash Vkhach city rubbish collectors removed a half hour before McGrath discovered the mistake.
Bruce Coucliman, 21, and SC architecture student living at the same rooming house, hopped on his motorcycle and located the trash truck.
“Can’t unload trash in the street,“ was the city rubbish collectors reply.
Bruce followed the truck for two hours while McGrath got help. Two more students were added to the chase and followed the truck more than 12 miles to Griffith Park.
Rubbish officials took pains to empty the truck in a cleared area and the quartet “dug in” with forks and shovels.
McGrath was finally able to recover about nine-teriths of the documents and a third of his bills and receipts.
Professor Predicts Growth in L. A. City's Population
“Population of 10.300.000 bv 1975 . . .
“Total personal income likely to increase from 120 to 148 per cent during the same 17 year period . . .
“Billions of additional dollars being spent by the public for products and services currently unknown to the average consumer .. .
“A 71 per cent increase in automobiles on the streets—4,800,-000 in 1975 compared to 2,800,-000.”
These are some of the optimistic forecasts for the Los Angeles metropolitan area made in a study undertaken by Dr. Robert R. Dockson, professor of marketing in SC’s School of Commerce.
Deliberately Conservative
“The projections might appear unduly optimistic,” he observes. “However, when compared to past performances, they are deliberately conservative.
“In my opinion,” he adds, “the Los Angeles area is well on its* way to becoming the number one metropolis of the world.
New Development
According to the study, migra- j tion will boost population to a total of 7,700,000 by 1965, 8,-700.000 by 1970, and 10.300.000 by 1975.
A large part of this increase will be absorbed by those sections of the metropolitan area which have the greatest amount of undeveloped land. This includes East San Gabriel Valley, ! North Los Angeles County, West San Fernando Valley and Orange County.
The study indicates that since 1950 personal income in the Los Angeles area has expanded at the rate of approximately two per cent for each one per cent change in gross national product, and business activity in the met-ea before taxes is expected to accelerate at an even faster rate.
Average personal income for residents of the Los Angeles area before taxes is exepcted to reach from $3300 to $3800 by 1975. This compares with the 1957 level of approximately $2500.
The report points out that a rise in income will mean more money available for spending and thus increased sales of durables, non-durables and services.
Officiai
Notice
Students registered for the six week session who have deferred tuition accounts are reminded that the final payments are due July 14th. Payments made after July 14th will be subject to the $5.00 late payment fee unless an extension has been granted by the Office of Deferred Tuition. Payments may be made in person at the Office of the Bursar, or checks and money orders may be mailed, marked to the attention of the Bursar’s Office.
William D. Robertson
Director of Collection*
■■ ■ ■ ■' ■■ ■

Southern Cal ifornîa
SUMMER TROJAN
VOL. VIII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1958
NO. 5
On<
nov
tod
rom outside influences, nature threatened us, but we have conquered nature; ’s problems are psycholog-
al.’
e ar
fn
:ui on a He
a J ready
living in the
he said. "Life depends explorations in psychology, ies of predictions.” jsaid. “at first, when man
ment
is
but one of psychology, haviorism. After that came so-\ve are a;l concerned j ciaj suggestion. None of us are
University faculties cannot altogether disclaim responsibility for what is taught below the university level in their own fields.
This was one of the main points brought out by Sumner Ives, in a speech to a Founders Hall audience yesterday.
Ives, a visiting instructor from Tulane University, thinks that when a student is taught a falsehood in his pre-University schooling. university faculties are “morally obligated to correct
them.*”
Teaching Truth
“The primary consideration is whether what we have been
teaching is—to the best of our knowledge—true, he said.
Everyone seems to believe
that linguistics is a new field. This notion, according to Ives, is true only in part. The term is new and is used to identify a
Official
Notice
All students who plan to enroll for Field Work in
School Administration and Supervision, (Ed. Ad. 529) or for Field Work in Secondary Administration and Supervision (Ed. Ad. 559) must attend a special meeting to be held Tuesday, July 15, at 1:15 p.m. in Administration 206.
It is important for all students who plan to register for Field Work during the coming school year, but who will not he able to attend instructional meetings this fall, to attend this meeting.
Edward H. LaFranehi, Chairman
recently isolated branch of the total study of language.
“But the basis which the linguist uses for discovering the grammatical machinery of English is very similar to the basis used by the Greek grammarians for discovering grammatical machinery of Greek more than two thousand years ago.”
Discusses Hooks
Dr. Ives went on to tell of the various books published on the subject which are the basis for modern language standards.
He then discussed
the back-grammar, Addison, feels that
ground of traditional noting figures like Swift and Pope. He the relic of this 18th century reaction survives in our schools today.
He feels that the reasons have been the “preservation of a respect for classical learning which, for so long a time, made a knowledge of Latin the mark of an educated man, and the failure of the language people themselves to apply themselves to useful and productive tasks.”
The total study of language is divided into several branches, structural linguistics, dialectology, semantics, and rhetoric, he said.
Defines Linguistics
Structural linguistics deals with the forms of language, with the tangible symbols tha convy meaning and the rules which describe their combination into actual utterances.
Dialectology deals with variations in language—with the social and regional differences within a particular language and with what the individual variations indicate as to the social status and regional backgrounds of those who use them.
(Continued on Page 3)
Mankind on Death s Brink States Heard
Civilization is operating on a brink which fluctuates back and forth. One more change, one more duel to the death and nothing will be left.
Such was the opinion rendered by Gerald Heard, philosopher, author and lecturer, when he spoke at SC Tuesday. i
“We must discover what we’re leads to the power of religion, going'to do in the future,” said This, in turn, leads to the law Heard. “Were no longer suffer-; of morality, which can be ful-1 ins
I BORDER-BOUND BY BUS
Trojans Plan Early Rising For Day in Tijuana Sun
filled by the law of love. This ' law of love can give you peace with yourself, your neighbor and | finally with the universe.”
Man’s Exploration
Heard, briefly outlining man’s
3 the importance realized he was an individual, he
f forecasting in regards to wea- thought he carried his own des- !
her and airplanes to illustrate j tiny. After that came the views
of Machiaveli which many people j followed. ‘You must behave to j all your friends as if they may be your enemies, and all your j enemies as if they may be your • friends,’ was one of his mottos,” Heard said.
Social Suggestion “The next step in man’s exploration.” said Heard, “was be-
point.
Dark Psyche
“We are no longer a thing of being,” he said, “we are now a thing of becoming. It is very important that we keep an open mind within the arms of an open heart.”
Heard feels that the first question of today is no longer one of t heologx “Today
with psychologyhe continued, | reasonable, we are just waiting “hut the psyche is still a vast,1 to be suggested, dark grand canyon. j “We only see things that con- j
Law of Love j firm our hearts,” he sa d “for j
“However, the moment of we can’t afford to break our darkness is opening up.” he said. J hearts. Psychological research “Man is just beginning his evo- i will continue, whether or not lution. The future of psychology! we are getting results remains is enormously helpful, for it to be seen.” *
Universities Responsible For Poor Schools-lves
BORDER BOUND—Hat dancing is one of the many sporis to be enjoyed by the busload of SC students who will leave tomorrow for Tijuana, Mexico.
Tomorrow morning at sic a bus load of Trojans and Tro-janes will head south of the border for a day in old Mexico.
The travelers will make their first stop at San Juan Capistrano for breakfast and a tour through the mission. The crumbling ruins of the old religious edifice make excellent settings for picture-taking. Visitors can even count the “returning swallows.” . *
The group will then proceed to Old San Diego where they will view Ramona’s marriage place, and the old San Diego Mission. Ramona was the heroine of the Helen Hunt Jackson novel. “Ramona.” She was an acKial person who lived in. the early days of California.
Lunch will be eaten at the San Diego Zoo. The zoo is supposedly the best zoo west of the Mississippi River.
The next stop will be Tijuana where the group will break up into small packs or go their separate ways for an afternoon of [ sightseeing.
The travelers will return by way of the Naval Repair Base ! and Training Center, Sunset ! Cliffs and La Jolla. This is an 1 excellent opportunity for out-of-state students and faculty to see ! some of the scenic wonders of i California and Mexico.
Student Gets Ph D From Local Dump
Bill McGrath, 38 , h i g h school teacher ami former Navy commander, got his Ph. D in a dump. Few people can make that statement.
He was preparing to move from a rooming house at l(Hi2 W. 35th St., and put all his valuable papers — including Navy Discharge and Reserve certificates, his Ph.D., and deeds and Escrow papers to five parcels of proprety valued in excess of $250,000 — in a cardboard box.
His landlady threw the en-. tire collection into the trash Vkhach city rubbish collectors removed a half hour before McGrath discovered the mistake.
Bruce Coucliman, 21, and SC architecture student living at the same rooming house, hopped on his motorcycle and located the trash truck.
“Can’t unload trash in the street,“ was the city rubbish collectors reply.
Bruce followed the truck for two hours while McGrath got help. Two more students were added to the chase and followed the truck more than 12 miles to Griffith Park.
Rubbish officials took pains to empty the truck in a cleared area and the quartet “dug in” with forks and shovels.
McGrath was finally able to recover about nine-teriths of the documents and a third of his bills and receipts.
Professor Predicts Growth in L. A. City's Population
“Population of 10.300.000 bv 1975 . . .
“Total personal income likely to increase from 120 to 148 per cent during the same 17 year period . . .
“Billions of additional dollars being spent by the public for products and services currently unknown to the average consumer .. .
“A 71 per cent increase in automobiles on the streets—4,800,-000 in 1975 compared to 2,800,-000.”
These are some of the optimistic forecasts for the Los Angeles metropolitan area made in a study undertaken by Dr. Robert R. Dockson, professor of marketing in SC’s School of Commerce.
Deliberately Conservative
“The projections might appear unduly optimistic,” he observes. “However, when compared to past performances, they are deliberately conservative.
“In my opinion,” he adds, “the Los Angeles area is well on its* way to becoming the number one metropolis of the world.
New Development
According to the study, migra- j tion will boost population to a total of 7,700,000 by 1965, 8,-700.000 by 1970, and 10.300.000 by 1975.
A large part of this increase will be absorbed by those sections of the metropolitan area which have the greatest amount of undeveloped land. This includes East San Gabriel Valley, ! North Los Angeles County, West San Fernando Valley and Orange County.
The study indicates that since 1950 personal income in the Los Angeles area has expanded at the rate of approximately two per cent for each one per cent change in gross national product, and business activity in the met-ea before taxes is expected to accelerate at an even faster rate.
Average personal income for residents of the Los Angeles area before taxes is exepcted to reach from $3300 to $3800 by 1975. This compares with the 1957 level of approximately $2500.
The report points out that a rise in income will mean more money available for spending and thus increased sales of durables, non-durables and services.
Officiai
Notice
Students registered for the six week session who have deferred tuition accounts are reminded that the final payments are due July 14th. Payments made after July 14th will be subject to the $5.00 late payment fee unless an extension has been granted by the Office of Deferred Tuition. Payments may be made in person at the Office of the Bursar, or checks and money orders may be mailed, marked to the attention of the Bursar’s Office.
William D. Robertson
Director of Collection*
■■ ■ ■ ■' ■■ ■